Word: treating
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...human being, as has been said of a whole people, that when he ceases to possess "individuality," his progress ends. Mass education makes it all the more possible for this precious quality to be lost. Mr. Harkness's gift to Exeter, on the other hand, has put emphasis on treating the students as distinct individuals, or to quote the principal of the Horace Mann School, "as a good physician would treat their physical growth and welfare...
...just that the stockholders of the carrier earning the revenue by performing the service from which the fund arises, should be preferred over the stockholders of the carrier that does not earn it. ... To treat the advances as loans does not increase the indebtedness of the recipient carrier. ... It manifestly imposes no additional charge upon shippers...
...courses which approach these topics treat them inadequately. Fine Arts does give a certain amount of the theory of "line" and of "composition," but it devotes its time principally to elementary drawing. The course in aesthetics in the Philosophy Department deals with psychological and metaphysical theories, but little with their direct application...
...hair and natty clothes indulging their social instincts. In the decade after the War. the "country club" stigma wore off. This was principally because Princeton could then beat Yale and Harvard at football. There were giants in those great days- "Stan" Keck, "Al" Wittmer, "Hank" Garrity, Don Lourie, Herb Treat, Ed McMillan, "Pink" Baker,- Howell van Gerbig- and Princeton's alumni were happy. But then Princeton began taking itself seriously as an intellectual centre, a place to train the mind. Its curriculum and entrance requirements were stiffened. Learning was made more real. A new seriousness, almost philosophical, came over...
Musical Sanders Theatre--second Boston Symphony Concert under the direction of Dr. Serge Koussevitzky with Eleanor Packard as piano soloist. This promises to be a rare treat...